Silvaco uses cookies to improve your user experience and to provide you with content we believe will be of interest to you. Learn detailed information on Privacy Policy. By using this website, you consent to the use of our cookies.

Atlas

2D Silicon Device Simulator

S-Pisces™ is an advanced 2D device simulator for silicon based technologies
that incorporates both drift-diffusion and energy balance transport equations.
A large selection of physical models are available which include surface/bulk
mobility, recombination, impact ionization and tunneling models. Typical applications
include MOS, bipolar, and BiCMOS technologies. The capabilities of all the
physical models have been extended to deep submicron devices, SOI devices,
and non-volatile memory structures.

All measurable electrical parameters can
be calculated. For MOS technologies these include gate and drain characteristics,
subthreshold leakage, substrate
currents, and punchthrough voltage. For bipolar technologies Gummel plots
and saturation curves can be predicted.

Other important characteristics that
can
be calculated include breakdown behavior, kink and snapback effects, CMOS
latchup, guarding breakdown voltage, low-temperature and high-temperature operation,
AC parameters, and intrinsic switching times.

Complete MOS Characterization

Electron temperature distribution in a 0.3µm MOSFET.
Impact ionization rate is based on the carrier temperature.

The LDD MOSFET structure simulated in the process simulator Athena and the final structure imported directly into Atlas. The electric field contours superimposed on the plot.

Substrate current in a MOSFET calculated using the Energy Balance and classical drift-diffusion models.

Simulated snapback in the breakdown curve caused by the parasitic bipolar.

Gate C-V plot for a MOS capacitor. Both the high and low frequency responses are demonstrated.

Simulated ID-VD and ID-VGS data. These characteristics may be loaded into UTMOST to extract the equivalent BSIM3 or BSIM4 Spice models.

Complete Bipolar Characterization

S-Pisces simulates all aspects of bipolar device performance. DC characteristics
such as Gummel plots and Ic vs. VCE are all easy to simulate.
Transient calculation of intrinsic switching speeds and fT vs. Ic are
performed using the time domain mode of S-Pisces.

Simulated IC-VCE characteristics.

Simulated Gummel plot
(IC and IB vs VB) and
the current gain vs IC.

Intrinsic switching speed of a bipolar transistor
by performing a transient analysis where the base voltage gets pulsed on.

Characteristics of AC performance to arbitrary high frequencies is possible.
The figure above shows the cutoff frequency (fT) as a function of collector
current. Current gain and other RF figures of merit can also be plotted
against frequency.

A bipolar transistor was simulated in Athena and imported
into Atlas. Voltages were applied to the collector and base contacts to
turn the transistor on. The figure illustrates the electron concentration
contours and current flow vectors, when the device is operating.

Advanced Device Structures

Enhancements to S-Pisces enable rapid and robust simulation of SOI transistors.
Advanced numerical techniques are employed to enable fast calculation of
all SOI characteristics including the kink effect. The figure above shows
the impact ionization rate and current flowlines in a thin layer SOI transistor.

Above shows the ID-VD characteristics
of the above device which illustrates both the kink effect and breakdown.

This is a comparison of electron concentration in
the off and on states in a power DMOS device. The left hand figure is for
the off state with the gate voltage set to zero. The right hand figure
is with a gate voltage well above threshold. The inversion layer can be
clearly seen at the surface of the channel.

As an example of a hybrid device, an insulated gate bipolar transistor
(IGBT), is shown here. Potential in the on-state and current flowlines
are shown. An equal amount of current density flows between each pair of
lines. The current flows from the emitter close to the surface, under the
gate, and down into the collector contact on the backside.

S-Pisces includes models to support simulation of
EPROMs, EEPROMs and FLASH EEPROM cells. Hot carrier injection and Fowler-Nordheim
tunneling
are used to charge and discharge the floating gate. The figure
illustrates potentials and ionization rate in a FLASH EEPROM cell prior
to programming. The complex geometry is imported automatically from Athena.

EEPROM device design curves are shown in the three
figures above. These show programming time vs. drain voltage,
erasing
time vs. gate oxide thickness
and a programming ID/VDS curve showing punchthrough.

High-k Dielectrics

Breakdown Analysis

Breakdown voltages of power devices are improved using multiple guard
ring structures. S-Pisces simulates the floating regions and allows the
optimization of the numbers and spacings of guard rings. The figure above
shows a structure with two guard rings which act to spread out the potential
contours, thereby reducing the electric field and increasing the breakdown
voltage.Using cylindrical symmetry, 3-D guard ring structures can be modeled.
Another common technique to increase breakdown voltages is the use of floating
field plates. These can be simulated in S-Pisces using models similar to
EPROM floating gates.

Strained Silicon MOS

Comparison of in-plane and perpendicular electron mobilities in strained
silicon on SiGe

Technical Specifications

S-Pisces calculate DC, AC and time-domain solutions
for general nonplanar 2-D silicon based device structures. The device structures
may be specified by
the user, or from the output of a process simulator such as Athena. S-Pisces
incorporates both drift-diffusion and energy-balance transport models,
and provides many advanced mobility models. S-Pisces includes models for Shockley-Read-Hall
and Auger recombination, band-gap narrowing, impact ionization, band-to-band
tunneling, Fowler-Nordheim tunneling, non-local tunneling, hot carrier
injection,
Ohmic and Schottky contacts, and floating gates.